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Saturday, April 15, 2017

Keeping vigil...in silence...full of trust... (HOLY SATURDAY)

Holy Saturday is sacred as the day of the Lord's rest; it has been called

the "Second Sabbath" after creation. The day is and should be the most calm

and quiet day of the entire Church year, a day broken by no liturgical function

and is chiefly a day of solemn vigil for the Lord’s resurrection. HOLY SATURDAY

"And, finally, Holy Saturday is the day of God’s silence. It must be a day of silence. We must do everything possible so that it is a day of silence, as that Day, which was the day of God’s silence. Jesus placed in the sepulcher shares with the whole of humanity the tragedy of death as a silence that speaks and expresses love as solidarity with all those ever abandoned, which the Son of God reaches filling the emptiness that only the infinite mercy of God the Father can fill. God is silent, but out of love. In this day love, that silent love, becomes expectation of life in the resurrection. We think of Holy Saturday: it will do us good to think of the silence of Our Lady, “the Believer,” who in silence awaited the Resurrection. Our Lady must be the icon for us of that Holy Saturday. To think much of how Our Lady lived that Holy Saturday, in expectation. It is a love that does not doubt, but that hopes in the Lord’s word, and which becomes manifest and splendid on Easter day." -Pope Francis,Wednesday Audience, 23 March 2016

"The last day of the Holy Week: a fruitful stillness before the breathtaking action of the night. Perhaps only the greatest Russian writers have succeeded in painting it as it is, a pause, a last moment of waiting, made holy by the Lord's rest in the tomb.

The Church is waitingat the tomb and weeps. She sees where the Lord has been laid, where the woman had buried Adam, where man is buried where he had come to grief through her evil counsel. She sees it and weeps. Sheweeps at the Lord's tomb, as the Lord wept for Lazarus: for sin which killed the giver of all life. But her tears are soft, and she is at peace. . . .The death of Adam haslost its terrors in the tomb of Christ.The death forobedience' sakehas snuffed out sin. No longer does a massa damnatablunder on from sin to sin and deathto death,but the body of the obedient Christ rests in hope. A foreboding of the happy chance of fault which merited such and so great a redeemer. It is a foreboding of the blessedness of suffering earning 'the namewhichis above all names', and the'glory of God the Father',which makesthe seers — men and theChurch —at peace and full of hope."

D. AemilianaLöhr,The GreatWeek

“Today a great silence reigns on earth,

a great silence and a great stillness. A great silence because the King is asleep.

The earth trembled and is still because God has fallen asleep in the flesh and

he has raised up all who have slept ever since the world began. . .

He has gone to search for Adam, our first father, as for a lost sheep."

From ancient homily, Liturgy of the Hours, Holy Saturday

"... Holy Saturday...the more I reflect on it,

the more this seems to be fitting for the nature of our human life:

we are still awaiting Easter; we are not yet standing in the full light